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Carly Fiorina says country's treatment of veterans is 'shameful'

Fiorina has met with many veterans and hosted a roundtable to ask veterans for input on how to improve the Veterans Affairs Department. Her nonprofit organization, Unlocking Potential, is partnering with Wounded Warriors.

Op-Ed: Who I'll vote for this November

This is the final column in a four-part series in the Washington Examiner by Carly Fiorina. This series focuses on what citizens can do to impact the political culture, their role in leading our citizen government, and ends with how to approach the 2018 midterm elections.

Op-ed: Stop waiting on Washington to fix our problems

This is the third column in a 4-part series in the Washington Examiner by Carly Fiorina. This series focuses on what citizens can do to impact the political culture, their role in leading our citizen government, and will end with how to approach the 2018 midterm elections.

Op-Ed: has disparaged women’s looks — including mine. But we have bigger problems.

My intention in writing is to highlight that, while any president’s diminishing and disrespectful words have impact, there are things we can each do that will have far greater importance. This is not to condone or set aside his comments — he was at it again on Twitter this week — nor is it to deny that words have real power, or that disrespect of others, for any reason, has real consequences. However, while we are understandably troubled by words, actions of substance always speak louder and last longer.

Carly Fiorina: It's never as easy as the politicians think it is

This is the second column in a 4-part series in the Washington Examiner by Carly Fiorina. This series focuses on what citizens can do to impact the political culture, their role in leading our citizen government, and will end with how to approach the 2018 midterm elections.

Public life must turn business to the common good, conference hears

Human dignity and the common good are the essential aims of work, attendees heard at the 2018 Principled Entrepreneurship conference in Washington, D.C. The three-day conference is being cosponsored by the Catholic University of America’s Busch School of Business and the Napa Institute.

This is the first column in a 4-part series in the Washington Examiner by Carly Fiorina. This series focuses on what citizens can do to impact the political culture, their role in leading our citizen government, and will end with how to approach the 2018 midterm elections.

Op-ed: Washington has had endless opportunities to fix broken immigration system

Newton’s Cradle is a common fixture in a corporate office. It is the desk toy where someone drops a little metallic ball on a string and it hits the others, sending the one on the opposite end swinging. As this is happening, there is plenty of energy spent and exchanged — and a lot of visible motion — but at the end, there they hang again. Motionless. Exactly where they started. Lots of energy spent, but no change.

Washington, D.C., is a lot like that, and it has been for quite a while. When politicians are faced with a problem, someone on one end riles up energy and creates a commotion. That sends the folks on the other end into a similar frenzy, and the back and forth begins. It can be entertaining to watch and listen. All of the activity feels productive. Then, we end up back where we started: nothing solved…

Springfield's nonprofit organizations will soon get a boost from Carly Fiorina and the MassMutual Foundation.

MassMutual is working with Fiorina, the former CEO of Hewlett-Packard and 2016 Republican presidential candidate, to provide leadership training to charity and civic groups in the city, Fiorina and MassMutual said this week…

Carly Fiorina Discusses New Foundation, What Makes a Good Leader

Former 2016 GOP presidential candidate Carly Fiorina said she’s looking to create more leaders in the non-profit sector with her new charitable organization, the Unlocking Potential Foundation.

Every organization, regardless of industry, needs a strong leadership team to succeed. This is especially true for nonprofits, where executives, founders and managers need to rally staff, volunteers and donors around a common cause.

But it's not just the C-suite who can provide this type of inspiration and motivation -- leadership can happen at any level of an organization, so it's important to make sure you have a well-rounded team that feels empowered to take charge from wherever they are…